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Dive into the research topics where Jürgen Hedderich is active.

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Featured researches published by Jürgen Hedderich.


Gastroenterology | 1991

Primary B-cell gastric lymphoma: A clinicopathological study of 145 patients

Sergiu B. Cogliatti; Ulrico Schmid; Urs Schumacher; Friedjof Eckert; Martin-Leo Hansmann; Jürgen Hedderich; Hiroshi Takahashi; K. Lennert

Resection specimens from 145 patients with primary B-cell gastric lymphoma at stage IE (n = 88) and at stage IIE (n = 57) were investigated. Histologically, low-grade malignant B-cell lymphomas arising from the mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue, including immunocytoma (n = 71), could be distinguished from high-grade malignant B-cell lymphomas with (n = 25) and without (n = 49) evidence of a low-grade component. The very rare low-grade B-cell lymphomas of centroblastic-centrocytic, centrocytic, and plasmacytic type were not considered. All patients had undergone primary gastric resection, and 65 received additional chemotherapy (n = 33), radiotherapy (n = 22), or both (n = 10). Actuarial overall survival rates calculated by the Kaplan-Meier life-table method were 76% after 5 years and 58% after 10 years. According to the Mantel test and a multivariate analysis using the Cox regression method, patients at stage IE had a significantly better survival probability than those at stage IIE (P less than 0.0001); 5-year survival rates were 87% and 61%, respectively. The survival probability for low-grade malignant lymphomas was significantly better than for tumors with secondary high-grade transformation (P less than 0.05) or for primary high-grade lymphomas (P less than 0.0001), whereas the two high-grade groups were not significantly different. Five-year survival rates were 91% for low-grade, 73% for secondary high-grade, and 56% for primary high-grade malignant lymphomas. Retrospectively, no significantly different survival rates were found between patients who had undergone gastric resection alone and patients who had received additional treatment. However, survival analyses showed that classification and grading according to the histopathological concept of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue-derived gastric lymphomas into low-grade B-cell lymphomas of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue type and high-grade B-cell lymphomas with or without evidence of a low-grade component has great prognostic relevance.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Replication of signals from recent studies of Crohn's disease identifies previously unknown disease loci for ulcerative colitis

Andre Franke; Tobias Balschun; Tom H. Karlsen; Jürgen Hedderich; Sandra May; Tim Lu; Dörthe Schuldt; Susanna Nikolaus; Philip Rosenstiel; Michael Krawczak; Stefan Schreiber

Following up on recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of Crohns disease, we investigated 50 previously reported susceptibility loci in a German sample of individuals with Crohns disease (n = 1,850) or ulcerative colitis (n = 1,103) and healthy controls (n = 1,817). Among these loci, we identified variants in 3p21.31, NKX2-3 and CCNY as susceptibility factors for both diseases, whereas variants in PTPN2, HERC2 and STAT3 were associated only with ulcerative colitis in our sample collection.


The Journal of Pathology | 2000

The grade of pancreatic ductal carcinoma is an independent prognostic factor and is superior to the immunohistochemical assessment of proliferation

Jutta Lüttges; Sandra Schemm; Ilka Vogel; Jürgen Hedderich; Bernd Kremer; Günter Klöppel

Tumour grade is one of the prognostic factors in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, but its value is controversial. In this study, the predictive value and the reproducibility of the WHO grading system were reconsidered and the possibility of supplementing it with the immunohistochemically assessed proliferative activity was investigated. Seventy resected ductal adenocarcinomas of the head of the pancreas were evaluated. A total of 60 HPF fields on two to four sections per tumour were screened for glandular differentiation, mucin production, mitosis, and nuclear atypia by two observers with different degrees of experience. Each criterion was scored and the grade was calculated from the mean value of all single scores. Corresponding slides were immunohistochemically stained with the proliferation marker Ki‐S5. The percentage of positive nuclei was assessed and a proliferation index (PI) assigned (<10%=1; 10–50%=2; >50%=3). Multivariate analysis (Cox regression) identified grade and R stage as the most significant factors for predicting survival. The PI determined on the basis of Ki‐S5 staining did not prove to be an independent prognostic factor. In 30 of 70 carcinomas, it correlated with the tumour grade. Within a given tumour grade, the cases with the least favourable prognosis could be distinguished on the basis of their PI. The inter‐observer variability was considerable, with the main differences occurring in the group of G1 tumours. According to the refined WHO criteria, the histopathological grade of pancreatic ductal carcinoma is an important independent prognostic factor, but reproducibility depends on the expertise of the observer. Criteria that relate to cellular and structural differentiation seem to be more predictive than those related to proliferation. Copyright


Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2006

Gastric emptying time of fluids and solids in healthy subjects determined by 13C breath tests: influence of age, sex and body mass index.

Stephan Hellmig; Florian Von Schöning; Christof Gadow; S. Katsoulis; Jürgen Hedderich; Ulrich R. Fölsch; Eckhard Stüber

Background and Aim:  Disturbance of gastric emptying leads to a variety of symptoms. Furthermore, gastric motility disorders might play a role in the pathophysiology of functional dyspepsia. In previous studies 13C breath tests were validated as non‐invasive tools in the measurement of gastric emptying time. So far, reliable reference values of healthy subjects are missing and the impact of constitutional traits (age, sex, body mass index [BMI]) needs to be clarified.


European Journal of Radiology | 2011

Breast ultrasound elastography--results of 193 breast lesions in a prospective study with histopathologic correlation.

F. K. Schaefer; I. Heer; P. J. Schaefer; C. Mundhenke; S. Osterholz; B.M. Order; N. Hofheinz; Jürgen Hedderich; Martin Heller; Walter Jonat; I. Schreer

PURPOSE To evaluate the diagnostic performance of ultrasound elastography in breast masses. MATERIAL AND METHODS 193 lesions (129 benign, 64 malignant) were analyzed with the EUB 8500 Logos-ultrasonic-unit (Hitachi Medical, Japan) and a linear-array-transducer of 7.5-13-MHz. Standard of reference was cytology (FNAfine needle aspiration) or histology (core biopsy). The elastic-score was classified according to a 6-point colour-scale (Ueno classification; 1-3 = benign, 4-5 = malignant). Conventional B-mode ultrasound (US) findings were classified according to the BI-RADS classification. Statistical analysis included sensitivity, specificity, ROC-analysis and kappa-values for intra-/interobserver reliability. RESULTS The mean score for elasticity was 4.1 ± 0.9 for malignant lesions, and 2.1 ± 1.0 for benign lesions (p < 0.001). With a best cut-off point between elasticity scores 3 and 4, sensitivity was 96.9%, and specificity 76%. Setting a best cut-off point for conventional US between BI-RADS 4 and 5, sensitivity was 57.8%, and specificity 96.1%. Elastography provided higher sensitivity and lower specificity than conventional US, but two lesions with elasticity score 1 were false negative, whereas no lesion scored BI-RADS 1-3 were false negative. ROC-curve was 0.884 for elastography, and 0.820 for conventional US (p < 0.001). Weighted kappa-values for intra-/interobserver reliability were 0.784/0.634 for BI-RADS classification, and 0.720/0.561 for elasticity scores. CONCLUSION In our study setting, elastography does not have the potential to replace conventional B-mode US for the detection of breast cancer, but may complement conventional US to improve the diagnostic performance.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Long-term results after surgical correction of atrioventricular septal defects

Andreas Boening; Jens Scheewe; K. Heine; Jürgen Hedderich; D. Regensburger; Hans-Heiner Kramer; Jochen Cremer

OBJECTIVE Review of the results of surgical correction of atrioventricular septal defects (AVSD), identification of risk factors for mortality and failure of left AV valve repair and determination of the impact of cleft closure on postoperative AV valve function. METHODS Between 1975 and 1995, 121 consecutive patients (55 males, 66 females) underwent surgery for biventricular correction of AVSD with a median age of 1.2 years and a median weight of 7.6 kg. Sixty-five patients had a complete AVSD, 17 patients an intermediate type, and 39 patients a partial AVSD. The left AV valve (MV) cleft was closed in 53 patients (43.8%). The mean follow-up time is 7.2+/-4.6 years. RESULTS Actuarial survival of the whole group after 1 year was 80%, after 10 and 20 years 78 and 65%, respectively. There were 18 early deaths (7-day mortality, 10.7%; 30-day mortality, 14.9%) and eight late deaths. In a univariate analysis, risk factors for early or late death were diagnosis of complete AVSD (P=0.006), no cleft closure (P=0.024), postoperative complications (P<0.0001), age <1.2 years (P=0.017), weight <7.6 kg (P=0.002), PA/Ao pressure ratio >0.7 (P<0.0001), and ECC time >110 min (P=0.002). In the multivariate analysis, postoperative complications (P=0.003) and PA/Ao pressure ratio >0.7 (P=0.001) had parallel effects on the postoperative risk for mortality. Moderate or severe MV regurgitation was present in six patients (6.0%) in the first evaluation after discharge and in 20 patients (20.4%) in the most recent postoperative control. There were 25 reoperations in 17 patients, of which 15 had to be performed for MV regurgitation and two for MV stenosis. Freedom from reoperation was 91% at 1 year, 79% at 10 years, and 76% at 15 and 20 years. We could not identify a statistically significant risk factor for reoperation. CONCLUSIONS In patients with AVSD of various morphologies closure of the left AV valve cleft significantly improves outcome without affecting the need for reoperation. Risk factors for early and late death (multivariate analysis) were a pulmonary/aortic pressure ratio >0.7 and the occurrence of any complication after surgery. The concept of an early surgical AVSD correction before an increase in pulmonary vascular resistance and AV valve deformations occur would represent a better surgical option than a late correction as done in our series. Early correction allows for reduction of early mortality, superior long-term survival rates and a high freedom from subsequent valve degeneration.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2012

Normal values of aortic dimensions, distensibility, and pulse wave velocity in children and young adults: a cross-sectional study

Inga Voges; Michael Jerosch-Herold; Jürgen Hedderich; Eileen Pardun; Christopher Hart; Dominik Gabbert; Jan Hinnerk Hansen; Colin Petko; Hans-Heiner Kramer; Carsten Rickers

BackgroundAortic enlargement and impaired bioelasticity are of interest in several cardiac and non-cardiac diseases as they can lead to cardiovascular complications. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is increasingly accepted as a noninvasive tool in cardiovascular evaluation. Assessment of aortic anatomy and bioelasticity, namely aortic distensibility and pulse wave velocity (PWV), by CMR is accurate and reproducible and could help to identify anatomical and bioelastic abnormalities of the aorta. However, normal CMR values for healthy children and young adults are lacking.MethodsSeventy-one heart-healthy subjects (age 16.4 ± 7.6 years, range 2.3 - 28.3 years) were examined using a 3.0 Tesla CMR scanner. Aortic cross-sectional areas and aortic distensibility were measured at four positions of the ascending and descending thoracic aorta. PWV was assessed from aortic blood flow velocity measurements in a aortic segment between the ascending aorta and the proximal descending aorta. The Lambda-Mu-Sigma (LMS) method was used to obtain percentile curves for aortic cross-sectional areas, aortic distensibility and PWV according to age.ResultsAortic areas, PWV and aortic distensibility (aortic cross-sectional areas: r = 0.8 to 0.9, p < 0.001; PWV: r = 0.25 to 0.32, p = 0.047 to 0.009; aortic distensibility r = -0.43 to -0.62, p < 0.001) correlated with height, weight, body surface area, and age. There were no significant sex differences.ConclusionsThis study provides percentile curves for cross-sectional areas, distensibility and pulse wave velocity of the thoracic aorta in children and young adolescents between their 3rd and 29th year of life. These data may serve as a reference for the detection of pathological changes of the aorta in cardiovascular disease.


Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 2012

Glioblastoma: Clinical characteristics, prognostic factors and survival in 492 patients

Andreas M. Stark; Julia van de Bergh; Jürgen Hedderich; H. Maximilian Mehdorn; Arya Nabavi

OBJECTIVE Glioblastoma is the most common and most malignant primary brain tumor in adults. The only overall accepted independent prognostic factors are patient age and performance. We present a large single institution patient series examined for prognostic factors using uni- and multivariate survival analysis. METHODS 492 patients were included who underwent craniotomy for newly diagnosed glioblastoma WHO grade IV between 1990 and 2007 at our department. The association to patient survival was estimated using log-rank test for univariate analysis and cox regression method for multivariate analysis. RESULTS Median patient age was 62 years (mean: 60.4 years, range: 22-93 years), the male: female ratio was 1.26:1. Primary genesis was found in 91.0% of cases. A multifocal tumor was present in 110 cases (22.4%). The median pre- and post-operative Karnofsky Performance Score was 70. Total tumor resection was performed in 288 cases (58.5%), subtotal removal in 134 cases (27.2%). The following parameters were significantly associated with survival in univariate analysis: age, performance, primary genesis, multifocal tumor, neurological deficit, neuropsychological findings, seizures, incidental finding, total or subtotal resection, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, combined radio-/chemotherapy with temozolomide, re-craniotomy, second tumor in patient history. The following parameters were significantly associated with survival in multivariate analysis: age, performance, multifocal tumor, total or subtotal resection, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, combined radio-/chemotherapy with temozolomide. CONCLUSION In addition to patient age and performance, we identified multiple lesions and resection status as independent prognostic factors. Radiotherapy, chemotherapy and combined radio-/chemotherapy with temozolomide were significantly associated with prolonged survival.


BJA: British Journal of Anaesthesia | 2012

Investigation of the agreement of a continuous non-invasive arterial pressure device in comparison with invasive radial artery measurement

C. Ilies; Martin Bauer; P. Berg; J. Rosenberg; Jürgen Hedderich; Berthold Bein; J. Hinz; R. Hanss

BACKGROUND Arterial pressure (AP) monitoring should be accurate, easy to use, free of risks, and ideally continuous. The continuous non-invasive arterial pressure (CNAP) device is non-invasive and provides continuous pressure readings. This study was performed to compare the agreement of CNAP and invasive AP monitoring. METHODS Ninety patients undergoing surgery under general anaesthesia were enrolled. Invasive pressure monitoring was established at the radial artery. CNAP monitoring using a finger sensor recording was begun before induction of anaesthesia. Statistical analysis was conducted with the Bland-Altman method for comparisons of repeated measures. RESULTS We obtained 16 843 valid pressure readings from 85 patients. Mean (sd) bias during maintenance of anaesthesia was: systolic AP: 4.2 (16.5) mm Hg; mean AP (MAP): -4.3 (10.4) mm Hg; and diastolic AP: -5.8 (6) mm Hg. The results of a subgroup analysis of patients who had a mean intra-arterial pressure of <70 mm Hg were as follows: systolic pressure: -0.3 (9.7) mm Hg; mean pressure: -6.8 (7.6) mm Hg; and diastolic pressure: -7.9 (7.2) mm Hg. Bias and percentage error during the induction period were greater in both the main and subgroup analyses, probably due to recalibration being omitted after induction. CONCLUSIONS The CNAP monitor showed an acceptable agreement and was interchangeable with invasive pressure monitoring for MAP during normotensive conditions. During induction of anaesthesia and when the AP was low, the agreement was less good and interchangeability was not achieved. These results suggest that CNAP is not statistically equivalent to invasive monitoring during all periods of anaesthesia but may be a useful additional AP monitor.


Gut | 2006

Iron loading and morbidity among relatives of HFE C282Y homozygotes identified either by population genetic testing or presenting as patients

C.A. Mccune; David Ravine; Kymberley Carter; Helen A. Jackson; David W. Hutton; Jürgen Hedderich; Michael Krawczak; Mark Worwood

Background and aims: Although most cases of hereditary haemochromatosis are associated with homozygosity for the C282Y mutation of the HFE gene, clinical penetrance varies and other genes may modify disease expression. If so, relatives from clinically affected families, by inheriting such genes, may accumulate more iron. To seek evidence for this, we compared iron status and morbidity in unselected first degree relatives of two groups of index cases from South Wales, namely asymptomatic C282Y homozygotes identified by genetic screening of blood donors (n = 56) and C282Y homozygous haemochromatosis patients presenting clinically (n = 60). Methods: All participating relatives had a structured interview, clinical assessment, and laboratory investigations. Health related quality of life was measured (SF-36 version 2). Results: In total, 92% of 180 eligible first degree relatives were interviewed in the “screened” family group and 85% of 143 eligible relatives in the “patient” group. Of 59 relatives homozygous for C282Y, 76% of men and 32% of women had the “iron phenotype” (raised transferrin saturation and serum ferritin). Logistic regression modelling of the iron phenotype risk showed that 42% of the initial model deviance could be explained by homozygosity for C282Y, another 6% by lifestyle factors, and 6% by being male. Family group membership was not a significant risk factor. Morbidity and SF-36 scores did not differ significantly either between C282Y homozygotes and relatives lacking C282Y, or between C282Y homozygotes from the “screened” and “patient” groups. Serious morbidity (including cirrhosis) was low in both groups of relatives. Conclusions:HFE C282Y homozygosity has a high penetrance for iron accumulation but a low clinical penetrance. Lack of excess morbidity among C282Y homozygous relatives of index cases who presented clinically suggests that residual unknown genetic or environmental factors do not greatly influence clinical outcome among C282Y homozygotes.

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Søren Jepsen

University Hospital Bonn

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